
Neil’s Notebook: Motivated Spartans Ready to Start Second Half of the Season With the GLI
12/29/2019 11:22:00 AM | Men's Ice Hockey
By Neil Koepke
MSUSpartans.com staff writer
DETROIT – Michigan State accomplished a lot in the first half of the season.
The Spartans got stellar goaltending, their defense was solid and the offense, while not great, was opportunistic.
MSU had some rewarding series – sweeps against Michigan and Wisconsin and a tie and win vs. Notre Dame. And the Spartans showed resiliency by battling back twice to erase two-goal deficits to win in the third period, and once to win after trailing 2-1.
But after 18 games and a 9-8-1 record overall and 6-3-1 in the Big Ten, Michigan State's goal is to get even better, more confident and put together some good runs to build an even better resume in the second half.
It all starts this week in the 55th Great Lakes Invitational at Little Caesars Arena. The No. 18 Spartans open the tournament against Michigan Tech (10-8-1, 8-6-0 WCHA) at 1 p.m. Monday, with Michigan (6-10-2, 2-7-1-0) and Ferris State (6-9-2, 4-6-2-0) colliding in the other semifinal at 4 p.m.
The third-place game is at 11:30 a.m. on Tuesday – New Year's Eve – and the championship game follows at 2:30 p.m.
"We've had a good end to the first half of our season. We've had a good season in the Big Ten and hope to carry that into the GLI,'' MSU senior center Patrick Khodorenko said.
Motivation shouldn't be a problem for the Spartans. They're eager to improve their overall record for NCAA Tournament potential. And then there's this: MSU hasn't won a GLI title since 2009.
The Spartan seniors are 0-5-1 in the last three GLIs.
"It's been very frustrating. You want to go down there and win a tournament,'' Spartans senior co-captain Sam Saliba said. "It starts with winning that first game and we haven't been able to do that.
"But we're a completely different team. In the last couple years, we haven't been playing this type of hockey going into the tournament. We kind of felt like we were limping into the (Christmas) break.
"We have a different feel this year. There's a certain confidence with this group.''
Since losing two games to Cornell to fall to 2-4-0 overall in early November, the Spartans are 7-4-1, a solid 6-3-1-0 in the Big Ten and 3-1 in their last four games.
"We've been playing pretty solid and we're looking forward to continuing that,'' Saliba said. "One of the things we've done is that we're resilient. Our special teams have been pretty good. I think our power play needs to get better down the stretch. We've got to get that going.
"We've been defending great and that hasn't been the case the last couple of years. We need to defend well and stick to our structure.''
Khodorenko likes the way his team has been able to overcome one and two-goal deficits and end up winning. But he'd like to see fewer tense, close, nail-biting third periods and fewer penalties.
"We need to try not to take as many penalties as we have and to start off faster. We've had some great third periods, but instead of having comeback victories, it would be nice to have some stay-in-front victories,'' Khodorenko said with a laugh. "Score the first one and keep the pedal to the metal.''
For Khodorenko, Saliba and fellow seniors Logan Lambdin, Jerad Rosburg, Butrus Ghafari, Anthony Scarcella, Damien Chrcek and Spencer Wright, this is the last opportunity to raise a GLI banner at Little Caesars Arena.
"I think we have a good chance this year. Our special teams are doing good and our goalie – John Lethemon – has been outstanding,'' Khodorenko said. "There's a lot to look forward this year.
"From here on out, we have to treat every game like it's a playoff game. That's how it's going to be.''
Despite their lack of success in the GLI and at LCA, the Spartans love playing in an NHL arena and in front of good crowds.
"It's really exciting with us, Michigan and Michigan Tech always being in the GLI and another team joining in," Saliba said. "There have been close games and they're played in an exciting atmosphere.
"It's pretty awesome. We've played some great games there. The Duel in the D with Michigan, there's like 18-19,000 fans there. It's great to play in an NHL rink.''
Last season, Michigan State lost in the semifinals to Lake Superior State, 4-3, in overtime. The Spartans tied Michigan, 2-2, in the third-place game, and LSSU went on to win the title with a 6-3 victory over Michigan Tech.
Coach Danton Cole believes this year's team is in better position to have success in the GLI.
"It's just the way we're playing and we have a little more experience,'' he said "The last couple of years when we went down there I thought we did a good job working and being fresh, but what we wanted to do systematically and culturally wasn't engrained that much.
"I think we can stick with that for a full 60 minutes and give us a chance to win this tournament.''
Cole sees maturity and defense as keys to the Spartans' solid start and reasons for optimism heading into the GLI and the second half of the season.
"I think it's maturity – just experience. We have some older guys, and coming off the (holiday) break, you can see it in practice,'' the third-year Spartans' coach said. "They were jumping and understood what we doing (on Friday) in our first practice.
"We did a little bit of video work before practice. I was thinking we'd be rusty but actually we were pretty sharp. I feel good about that.''
Cole also feels good about the structure of his team's defense and, of course, the standout play by goalie John Lethemon helps.
"The other thing is that we defend pretty well. I think the guys understand that you have to do that to win,'' Cole said. "If we can defend for a while and settle into our game until we find it, that's a good thing.''
Michigan Tech, 7-2-1 in its last 10 games, is coming off a 2-2 tie and 4-2 loss against No. 4/5 Clarkson, one of the best teams in the ECAC, along with No. 2/3 Cornell and No. 17 Harvard.
"They work really hard and have good balance up and down their lineup, and their goaltender (Matt Jurusik) is having an outstanding season,'' Cole said.
"They do some things in the neutral zone where you have to be really good coming through and make sure you don't turn the puck over.
They're a well-structured team and they had a great weekend going into the break against Clarkson.''
In each of Cole's first two seasons as MSU coach, he felt the Spartans improved in the second half of the year. He's hoping for the same in the next three months.
"Our first couple of years here, we've been better in the second half than we were in the first, and I'd like to see that continue,'' he said. "When I talk about playing faster, it's not just how fast we skate, but it's how we move the puck, how fast we react to different situations and most of that is without thinking.
"When you're playing and it's a habit, that's when you're playing well. We still need to build some habits, come concepts, and be faster and better. I think we'll do that in the second half.''

THE MSU-MTU RIVALRY: The Huskies lead the series 84-76-4 and are 6-2-2 in the last 10 meetings. But in the previous 10 games, Michigan State held a 9-1 edge. Over the last 30 meetings, the Spartans are 19-9-2 against Michigan Tech. In their last matchup, the Huskies defeated MSU, 5-2, in the GLI semifinals on Jan. 1, 2018.
SCOUTING THE HUSKIES: Michigan Tech has been streaky thus far this season. It won two games at Robert Morris to start the season but then went 1-6. The Huskies got back on track in mid-November and are 7-1-2 in their last 10 games. In their last series before the Christmas break, the Huskies hosted No. 4/5 Clarkson. The teams played to a 2-2 tie in the opener and Clarkson won the series finale, 4-2.
Tech's top 10 scorers include six sophomores, two freshmen, one senior and one junior.
Sophomore Alex Broetzman is the leading scorer with eight goals and six assists for 14 points. Four players are tied for second with 11 points apiece – sophomores Brian Halonen (7-4), Trenton Bliss (7-4) and defenseman Eric Gotz (3-8) and freshman Parker Saretsky (3-8).
Goalie Matt Jurusik is just one of three seniors to play regularly. Jurusik, a 6-foot-1, 200-pounder from La Grange, Ill., has played in 15 games with a 9-5-1 record, a 2.00 goals-against average and a .924 saves percentage. Jurusik, 22, played two years at Wisconsin before going back to junior hockey for one season, and then transferring to MTU.
Michigan Tech is averaging 2.42 goals-per-game, which ranks 39th in the nation. Its power play is converting on 18.3 percent of its opportunities (34th).
Defensively, the Huskies rank 12th in the nation with a team GAA of 2.05. Their penalty killing is at 81 percent (33rd).
Michigan Tech ended a 31-year GLI title drought when it won the 2012 championship, its first since 1980. But the Huskies have been in the GLI final five times in the last six years and lost each time. Last year, Lake Superior State defeated the Huskies, 6-3, to win its first GLI championship.
Michigan Tech coach Joe Shawhan is in his third season after replacing Mel Pearson, who took the Michigan job after the 2016-17 season. Shawhan, an assistant under Pearson, has a career record of 46-45-10, all at MTU.
SCOUTING THE BULDOGS: Michigan State leads the series with Ferris State, 74-38-15. The teams met in a non-conference series last season with the Spartans winning 5-3 at Munn Arena and FSU earning a split with a 4-1 win in Big Rapids.
MSU and the Bulldogs have met once in the GLI, with the Spartans winning 2-0 in a semifinal on Dec. 28, 2014. That season was Ferris State's only appearance in the GLI, going 0-2.
The Bulldogs started the 2019-20 season 2-1 before going 2-7, including losing six games in a row. But they've rebounded in the last eight games with a 4-2-2 run.
FSU is an experienced group with four seniors and three juniors among its top nine scorers.
Freshman defenseman Jake Willets leads the Bulldogs with one goal and 14 assists for 15 points. He's followed by senior defenseman Nate Kallen with 12 points – five goals and seven assists.
Marshall Moise, a junior, leads the team in goals with seven, and has 11 points in only eight games because of nagging injuries. He scored two goals in each of FSU's last two games two weeks ago – a 2-2 tie and 3-1 win over Alabama Huntsville.
Ferris State has used three goaltenders this season. Senior Austin Shaw has played in seven games, with a 3-2-1 record, a 2.38 goals-against average and a .909 saves percentage.
Sophomore Roni Salmenkangas has played in six games with a 2-3 record, a 3.97 GAA and a .875 saves percentage. Freshman Carter McPhail has been in seven games with a 1-4-1 record and a .904 saves percentage.
Coach Bob Daniels, a 1982 Michigan State graduate, is in his 28th season at Ferris State. He has a career record of 460-498-106. He's guided FSU to four trips to the NCAA Tournament, including a Frozen Four appearance in 2011-12 in which the Bulldogs defeated Union, 3-1, in the semifinals and lost to Boston College, 4-1, in the title game.
SCOUTING MICHIGAN: The Wolverines had a tough first half of the season as they suffered through a seven-game winless streak at 0-6-1. U-M has split its last three series – at New Hampshire, at Wisconsin and home against Penn State.
Michigan will be missing two of its best players for the GLI. Freshman defenseman Cam York and freshman Johnny Beecher are with the U.S. National Junior Team playing in the World Junior Championships in the Czech Republic.
Beecher and York are U-M's top scorers, each with nine points. Beecher has a team-leading five goals and four assists, while York's stats are the opposite – four goals and five assists.
The Wolverines will have to rely on seniors Jake Slaker (3-5-8), Will Lockwood (4-3-7) and Nick Pastujov (3-4-7) to provide some offense in the GLI.
U-M is averaging only 2.17 goals per game, which is 40th in the nation. Defensively, the Wolverines are ranked 14th, with a 2.17 goals per game – the same number as their goals-per-game.
Michigan has been getting solid goaltending from sophomore Strauss Mann, who has 6-9-1 record, a 2.06 goals-against average and a .931 saves percentage.
Coach Mel Pearson is in his third season at Michigan. He has a 41-41-1 record at U-M and a career record of 159-133-40. He coached at Michigan Tech for six years before coming back to Michigan in 2017. He was an assistant to Coach Red Berenson at U-M for 23 seasons before taking the head coaching position at Michigan Tech.
Michigan has gone three seasons without winning the GLI. Its last title came in 2015. The Wolverines and Spartans have played in the third-place game for three straight seasons, with U-M winning two and tying last season, 2-2.
Michigan leads the series with MSU, 165-137-24. The Spartans swept the Wolverines, 4-3 and 3-0, in a Big Ten series in mid-November.
IN THE BIG TEN: Minnesota defeated Bemidji State, 5-2, in the Mariucci Classic on Saturday. The Gophers will play St. Cloud State in the championship game on Sunday. St. Cloud upset No. 2/2 Minnesota State 7-2 in the other semifinal.
Ohio State completed a sweep of Colgate with a 3-0 win on Saturday. The No. 6/7 Buckeyes won the series opener, 3-2, on Friday.
No. 8/8 Penn State is off this weekend and plays host to Niagara, Jan. 3-4. No. 15 Notre Dame is also idle. Next up for the Irish is a home-and-home series with No. 19 Western Michigan – at WMU on Jan. 3 and at Notre Dame on Jan. 5.
Wisconsin, which hasn't played since getting swept at MSU, Dec. 6-7, plays the U.S. Under-18 team in an exhibition game on Dec. 31 in Plymouth, Mich.
MSUSpartans.com staff writer
DETROIT – Michigan State accomplished a lot in the first half of the season.
The Spartans got stellar goaltending, their defense was solid and the offense, while not great, was opportunistic.
MSU had some rewarding series – sweeps against Michigan and Wisconsin and a tie and win vs. Notre Dame. And the Spartans showed resiliency by battling back twice to erase two-goal deficits to win in the third period, and once to win after trailing 2-1.
But after 18 games and a 9-8-1 record overall and 6-3-1 in the Big Ten, Michigan State's goal is to get even better, more confident and put together some good runs to build an even better resume in the second half.
It all starts this week in the 55th Great Lakes Invitational at Little Caesars Arena. The No. 18 Spartans open the tournament against Michigan Tech (10-8-1, 8-6-0 WCHA) at 1 p.m. Monday, with Michigan (6-10-2, 2-7-1-0) and Ferris State (6-9-2, 4-6-2-0) colliding in the other semifinal at 4 p.m.
The third-place game is at 11:30 a.m. on Tuesday – New Year's Eve – and the championship game follows at 2:30 p.m.
"We've had a good end to the first half of our season. We've had a good season in the Big Ten and hope to carry that into the GLI,'' MSU senior center Patrick Khodorenko said.
Motivation shouldn't be a problem for the Spartans. They're eager to improve their overall record for NCAA Tournament potential. And then there's this: MSU hasn't won a GLI title since 2009.
The Spartan seniors are 0-5-1 in the last three GLIs.
"It's been very frustrating. You want to go down there and win a tournament,'' Spartans senior co-captain Sam Saliba said. "It starts with winning that first game and we haven't been able to do that.
"But we're a completely different team. In the last couple years, we haven't been playing this type of hockey going into the tournament. We kind of felt like we were limping into the (Christmas) break.
"We have a different feel this year. There's a certain confidence with this group.''
Since losing two games to Cornell to fall to 2-4-0 overall in early November, the Spartans are 7-4-1, a solid 6-3-1-0 in the Big Ten and 3-1 in their last four games.
"We've been playing pretty solid and we're looking forward to continuing that,'' Saliba said. "One of the things we've done is that we're resilient. Our special teams have been pretty good. I think our power play needs to get better down the stretch. We've got to get that going.
"We've been defending great and that hasn't been the case the last couple of years. We need to defend well and stick to our structure.''
Khodorenko likes the way his team has been able to overcome one and two-goal deficits and end up winning. But he'd like to see fewer tense, close, nail-biting third periods and fewer penalties.
"We need to try not to take as many penalties as we have and to start off faster. We've had some great third periods, but instead of having comeback victories, it would be nice to have some stay-in-front victories,'' Khodorenko said with a laugh. "Score the first one and keep the pedal to the metal.''
For Khodorenko, Saliba and fellow seniors Logan Lambdin, Jerad Rosburg, Butrus Ghafari, Anthony Scarcella, Damien Chrcek and Spencer Wright, this is the last opportunity to raise a GLI banner at Little Caesars Arena.
"I think we have a good chance this year. Our special teams are doing good and our goalie – John Lethemon – has been outstanding,'' Khodorenko said. "There's a lot to look forward this year.
"From here on out, we have to treat every game like it's a playoff game. That's how it's going to be.''
Despite their lack of success in the GLI and at LCA, the Spartans love playing in an NHL arena and in front of good crowds.
"It's really exciting with us, Michigan and Michigan Tech always being in the GLI and another team joining in," Saliba said. "There have been close games and they're played in an exciting atmosphere.
"It's pretty awesome. We've played some great games there. The Duel in the D with Michigan, there's like 18-19,000 fans there. It's great to play in an NHL rink.''
Last season, Michigan State lost in the semifinals to Lake Superior State, 4-3, in overtime. The Spartans tied Michigan, 2-2, in the third-place game, and LSSU went on to win the title with a 6-3 victory over Michigan Tech.
Coach Danton Cole believes this year's team is in better position to have success in the GLI.
"It's just the way we're playing and we have a little more experience,'' he said "The last couple of years when we went down there I thought we did a good job working and being fresh, but what we wanted to do systematically and culturally wasn't engrained that much.
"I think we can stick with that for a full 60 minutes and give us a chance to win this tournament.''
Cole sees maturity and defense as keys to the Spartans' solid start and reasons for optimism heading into the GLI and the second half of the season.
"I think it's maturity – just experience. We have some older guys, and coming off the (holiday) break, you can see it in practice,'' the third-year Spartans' coach said. "They were jumping and understood what we doing (on Friday) in our first practice.
"We did a little bit of video work before practice. I was thinking we'd be rusty but actually we were pretty sharp. I feel good about that.''
Cole also feels good about the structure of his team's defense and, of course, the standout play by goalie John Lethemon helps.
"The other thing is that we defend pretty well. I think the guys understand that you have to do that to win,'' Cole said. "If we can defend for a while and settle into our game until we find it, that's a good thing.''
Michigan Tech, 7-2-1 in its last 10 games, is coming off a 2-2 tie and 4-2 loss against No. 4/5 Clarkson, one of the best teams in the ECAC, along with No. 2/3 Cornell and No. 17 Harvard.
"They work really hard and have good balance up and down their lineup, and their goaltender (Matt Jurusik) is having an outstanding season,'' Cole said.
"They do some things in the neutral zone where you have to be really good coming through and make sure you don't turn the puck over.
They're a well-structured team and they had a great weekend going into the break against Clarkson.''
In each of Cole's first two seasons as MSU coach, he felt the Spartans improved in the second half of the year. He's hoping for the same in the next three months.
"Our first couple of years here, we've been better in the second half than we were in the first, and I'd like to see that continue,'' he said. "When I talk about playing faster, it's not just how fast we skate, but it's how we move the puck, how fast we react to different situations and most of that is without thinking.
"When you're playing and it's a habit, that's when you're playing well. We still need to build some habits, come concepts, and be faster and better. I think we'll do that in the second half.''
THE MSU-MTU RIVALRY: The Huskies lead the series 84-76-4 and are 6-2-2 in the last 10 meetings. But in the previous 10 games, Michigan State held a 9-1 edge. Over the last 30 meetings, the Spartans are 19-9-2 against Michigan Tech. In their last matchup, the Huskies defeated MSU, 5-2, in the GLI semifinals on Jan. 1, 2018.
SCOUTING THE HUSKIES: Michigan Tech has been streaky thus far this season. It won two games at Robert Morris to start the season but then went 1-6. The Huskies got back on track in mid-November and are 7-1-2 in their last 10 games. In their last series before the Christmas break, the Huskies hosted No. 4/5 Clarkson. The teams played to a 2-2 tie in the opener and Clarkson won the series finale, 4-2.
Tech's top 10 scorers include six sophomores, two freshmen, one senior and one junior.
Sophomore Alex Broetzman is the leading scorer with eight goals and six assists for 14 points. Four players are tied for second with 11 points apiece – sophomores Brian Halonen (7-4), Trenton Bliss (7-4) and defenseman Eric Gotz (3-8) and freshman Parker Saretsky (3-8).
Goalie Matt Jurusik is just one of three seniors to play regularly. Jurusik, a 6-foot-1, 200-pounder from La Grange, Ill., has played in 15 games with a 9-5-1 record, a 2.00 goals-against average and a .924 saves percentage. Jurusik, 22, played two years at Wisconsin before going back to junior hockey for one season, and then transferring to MTU.
Michigan Tech is averaging 2.42 goals-per-game, which ranks 39th in the nation. Its power play is converting on 18.3 percent of its opportunities (34th).
Defensively, the Huskies rank 12th in the nation with a team GAA of 2.05. Their penalty killing is at 81 percent (33rd).
Michigan Tech ended a 31-year GLI title drought when it won the 2012 championship, its first since 1980. But the Huskies have been in the GLI final five times in the last six years and lost each time. Last year, Lake Superior State defeated the Huskies, 6-3, to win its first GLI championship.
Michigan Tech coach Joe Shawhan is in his third season after replacing Mel Pearson, who took the Michigan job after the 2016-17 season. Shawhan, an assistant under Pearson, has a career record of 46-45-10, all at MTU.
SCOUTING THE BULDOGS: Michigan State leads the series with Ferris State, 74-38-15. The teams met in a non-conference series last season with the Spartans winning 5-3 at Munn Arena and FSU earning a split with a 4-1 win in Big Rapids.
MSU and the Bulldogs have met once in the GLI, with the Spartans winning 2-0 in a semifinal on Dec. 28, 2014. That season was Ferris State's only appearance in the GLI, going 0-2.
The Bulldogs started the 2019-20 season 2-1 before going 2-7, including losing six games in a row. But they've rebounded in the last eight games with a 4-2-2 run.
FSU is an experienced group with four seniors and three juniors among its top nine scorers.
Freshman defenseman Jake Willets leads the Bulldogs with one goal and 14 assists for 15 points. He's followed by senior defenseman Nate Kallen with 12 points – five goals and seven assists.
Marshall Moise, a junior, leads the team in goals with seven, and has 11 points in only eight games because of nagging injuries. He scored two goals in each of FSU's last two games two weeks ago – a 2-2 tie and 3-1 win over Alabama Huntsville.
Ferris State has used three goaltenders this season. Senior Austin Shaw has played in seven games, with a 3-2-1 record, a 2.38 goals-against average and a .909 saves percentage.
Sophomore Roni Salmenkangas has played in six games with a 2-3 record, a 3.97 GAA and a .875 saves percentage. Freshman Carter McPhail has been in seven games with a 1-4-1 record and a .904 saves percentage.
Coach Bob Daniels, a 1982 Michigan State graduate, is in his 28th season at Ferris State. He has a career record of 460-498-106. He's guided FSU to four trips to the NCAA Tournament, including a Frozen Four appearance in 2011-12 in which the Bulldogs defeated Union, 3-1, in the semifinals and lost to Boston College, 4-1, in the title game.
SCOUTING MICHIGAN: The Wolverines had a tough first half of the season as they suffered through a seven-game winless streak at 0-6-1. U-M has split its last three series – at New Hampshire, at Wisconsin and home against Penn State.
Michigan will be missing two of its best players for the GLI. Freshman defenseman Cam York and freshman Johnny Beecher are with the U.S. National Junior Team playing in the World Junior Championships in the Czech Republic.
Beecher and York are U-M's top scorers, each with nine points. Beecher has a team-leading five goals and four assists, while York's stats are the opposite – four goals and five assists.
The Wolverines will have to rely on seniors Jake Slaker (3-5-8), Will Lockwood (4-3-7) and Nick Pastujov (3-4-7) to provide some offense in the GLI.
U-M is averaging only 2.17 goals per game, which is 40th in the nation. Defensively, the Wolverines are ranked 14th, with a 2.17 goals per game – the same number as their goals-per-game.
Michigan has been getting solid goaltending from sophomore Strauss Mann, who has 6-9-1 record, a 2.06 goals-against average and a .931 saves percentage.
Coach Mel Pearson is in his third season at Michigan. He has a 41-41-1 record at U-M and a career record of 159-133-40. He coached at Michigan Tech for six years before coming back to Michigan in 2017. He was an assistant to Coach Red Berenson at U-M for 23 seasons before taking the head coaching position at Michigan Tech.
Michigan has gone three seasons without winning the GLI. Its last title came in 2015. The Wolverines and Spartans have played in the third-place game for three straight seasons, with U-M winning two and tying last season, 2-2.
Michigan leads the series with MSU, 165-137-24. The Spartans swept the Wolverines, 4-3 and 3-0, in a Big Ten series in mid-November.
IN THE BIG TEN: Minnesota defeated Bemidji State, 5-2, in the Mariucci Classic on Saturday. The Gophers will play St. Cloud State in the championship game on Sunday. St. Cloud upset No. 2/2 Minnesota State 7-2 in the other semifinal.
Ohio State completed a sweep of Colgate with a 3-0 win on Saturday. The No. 6/7 Buckeyes won the series opener, 3-2, on Friday.
No. 8/8 Penn State is off this weekend and plays host to Niagara, Jan. 3-4. No. 15 Notre Dame is also idle. Next up for the Irish is a home-and-home series with No. 19 Western Michigan – at WMU on Jan. 3 and at Notre Dame on Jan. 5.
Wisconsin, which hasn't played since getting swept at MSU, Dec. 6-7, plays the U.S. Under-18 team in an exhibition game on Dec. 31 in Plymouth, Mich.
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